Why Did "Cloth Diapers" Make a Change?

Top 10 New Words for Old Things

What It Used to Be Called:

Diapers

What changed:

Disposables soaked up most of the market.

Centuries ago, the word diaper had nothing to do with bottoms. It referred to a fabric with a distinctive geometric pattern. This kind of fabric was used in the garment for babies; that garment came to be known as a diaper.

These days diaper generally means the disposable kind - an invention that first appeared after World War II.

When the language required a new word for the old thing, cloth diaper was born.

An early use:

"Playtex tests confirmed by the Good Housekeeping Institute show that Dryper disposable diapers are more absorbent than ordinary cloth diapers." -Advertisement, Los Angeles Times, July 12 1960

What It Used to Be Called:

What changed:

Music. The electric guitar was developed in the 1920s (when it was first adopted by jazz musicians), and popularized in the late 1940s by the legendary Fender Company.

As a result, its predecessor was dubbed the acoustic guitar.

The two instruments once represented more of a culture clash than they do now. For example, when Bob Dylan famously plugged in his electric guitar at the 1965 Newport Folk Festival, he alarmed some folk music fans and, as Rolling Stone magazine put it, "unveiled his rock & roll heart."

An early use:

"[Garland Jeffrey's] new album, "American Boy and Girl," where he wrote all the songs, sings, and plays some acoustic guitar and percussion, has several songs about these 'urban throwaways.'" -Mary Campbell, Associated Press, Jan. 1960

What It Used to Be Called:

What changed:

Conventional warfare pits one military force against another, each armed with traditional guns and explosives.

Unconventional warfare, spawned during the last century, features biological, chemical, or nuclear weapons; it's also applied to counterinsurgency and guerrilla fighting.

An early use:

"The ground forces must make the most revolutionary changes in tactics and thinking to face atomic war... Some top-ranking military leaders fear the changes may be too revolutionary, leaving the ground forces unprepared for conventional warfare." -Life, July 25, 1955

What It Used to Be Called:

Childbirth

What changed:

Medicalized childbirth became an option.

During the second half of the twentieth century, with the growing popularity of Caesarean sections, labor inducing drugs, and epidural anesthesia, natural childbirth was conceived to describe labor and delivery without surgery and with minimal or no use of drugs or anesthetics.

An early use:

In a letter to Time magazine in Feb 9, 1953, Francella R. Poston wrote: "Natural childbirth is no craze. It is the desire of a group of healthy, well-adjusted women to go about having their babies naturally...."

What It Used to Be Called:

Book

What changed:

Paperbacks found their way into pockets everywhere.

The Great Depression created a market for inexpensive literature, and the first major paperback publisher, Penguin, stepped in to serve it. (Its early bestsellers included titles by Agatha Christie and Ernest Hemingway.)

With the rise of paperbacks, readers and publishers needed to identify hardcover books as such, and that term appeared in 1949.

An early use:

"The author of a big smash will probably make somewhere between $40,000 and $100,000 on the hardcover item that begins the great chain of success." -Life, July 31, 1964

What It Used to Be Called:

Mail

What changed:

E-mail rushed in, followed by texting, social network messaging, etc.

Snail mail is not only slower, but also much rarer. In the United States, for example, about 175 billion letters are sent each year, compared with many trillions of e-mails (and a heaping portion of spam).

An early use:

What It Used to Be Called:

Telephone

What changed:

Cell phones became indispensable.

The term itself goes back a long way. The original landline referred to a wire carrying telegraph signals over land rather than under water. Alexander Graham Bell's telephone system used land line for a wire carrying voice signals.

However, the word wasn't used much until cell phones entered the conversation. At that point, landline came to describe the immobile, newly old-fashioned telephone.

An Early Use (of the Modern Sense):

"When, if ever, will the migration from landlines to mobile stop, and when will landline networks cease to be economically viable?" -McKinsey Quarterly, Jan. 2000

What It Used to Be Called:

What changed:

Starting in the 1970s, new TV channels started pouring into American homes via new technologies.

Broadcast TV - i.e. the old-fashioned kind, transmitted over the airwaves - became distinct from the cable and satellite options.

An early use:

"The kind of television most of us watch is broadcast TV. Television stations beam signals over the air, and anyone in the area with a TV set can pick up the signals." -Kiplinger's Personal Finance, Sept. 1979

What It Used to Be Called:

Copy, Text, Paper

What changed:

What you're doing right now - reading on a screen - became a standard way to get information.

These days, hard copy refers to paper versions of textual or graphic information. But when the term first appeared, the alternative wasn't digital: hard copy originally referred to printouts of microfilm.

An early use:

"To produce the best quality hard copy from a single frame of microfilm ... select a particular exposure by adjusting the time and the light source intensity." -"Proceedings of the Annual Meeting and Convention," National Microfilm Association, 1963